Proud to say Georgia

Since 1851, 25 governors of Georgia have been graduates of Georgia. At least 17 UGA alumni are presidents or provosts of colleges and universities in the U.S. Nine UGA graduates have received the Pulitzer Prize. Four UGA alumni have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences.

Undergraduate Admissions

The University of Georgia is a national leader among public universities in the numbers of major scholarships earned by our students. We have had eight Rhodes Scholars since 1995. In the same period, our students have won 46 Goldwater Scholarships. UGA students have earned 12 Truman Scholarships since 1995, and each year we have multiple recipients of major national scholarships.

Graduate Admissions

Continuing Education

Whether you are looking for personal improvement, seeking a credential or wanting to change your career path, the University of Georgia Center for Continuing
Education delivers a variety of educational programs to meet your learning needs.

International Students

The University of Georgia has approximately 180 International Cooperative Agreements (ICAs) in over 50 countries. These agreements allow for the formal
development of activities such as faculty and student exchanges, collaborative research, seminars and workshops, and/or service programs.

Research at UGA

The Office of the Vice President for Research encourages and supports UGA research, scholarship and creative activities by assisting with the recruitment of research-intensive faculty, and providing infrastructure for sponsored research. We help to move UGA innovations into the marketplace, encourage research-based economic development, and ensure responsible conduct in research.

Centers & Institutes

UGA research addresses real-life problems, including the grand challenges associated with water, food, fuel, environment and health. It also enriches the soul through the arts, humanities and social sciences. OVPR's Interdisciplinary centers, institutes and research initiatives provide enhanced interactions and focus on advanced areas of research.

Student and Postdoctoral Research

Undergraduate students, graduate students and postdoctoral scholars are critical to the successful pursuit of research and scholarship at the University of Georgia. They contribute in multiple ways to research and scholarship in the physical, life and social sciences, as well as the arts and humanities.

PSO Units

For more than 80 years, PSO has led the University in bringing its resources to each of Georgia’s 159 counties, 500+ cities, and around the world, serving more than 110,000 individuals annually to improve the quality of life in Georgia and beyond.

Service-Learning

The University of Georgia has been recognized by the Carnegie Foundation for its institutional commitment to community engagement through teaching, research, and public service with the Community Engagement Classification. UGA was one of only 115 colleges and universities to achieve this elective classification in 2010 and joined the ranks of only 311 institutions nationally.

Campus Life

Student Affairs is a primary point of contact for students through more than 600 registered student organizations; student programming groups; social
fraternities and sororities; student leadership programs and volunteer services; and international and multicultural programs.

Health & Recreation

The 440,000-square-foot Bernard B. and Eugenia A. Ramsey Student Center for Physical Activities is one of the largest and most comprehensive fitness/exercise facilities for students and faculty in the country.

Get Involved

In 2000, UGA was the first university in the nation to organize a collegiate Relay For Life. It raised more than $115,000. UGA Relay now has over 3,200 student volunteers and has raised more than $2.3 million, benefiting The American Cancer Society.

Academic Units

Students and faculty pursue arts studies in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. The Special Collections Libraries provide access to materials related to the history and culture of Georgia, while the Willson Center and ICE promote Interdisciplinary inquiry and creative activity in the arts.

About UGA

Good for Georgia, good for the world

As a land- and sea-grant institution, the University of Georgia has a responsibility to create new knowledge that promises to enrich the lives of people in Georgia, the nation and the world. Research is key to fulfilling this responsibility.

UGA is a comprehensive research university and more than 2,800 faculty work diligently to address many of humanity's grand challenges, utilizing skills and experiences from fields as diverse as veterinary medicine, agriculture, genetics, psychology, bioenergy, regenerative bioscience, food safety, public health, cancer, obesity, engineering, pharmaceuticals and nanoscience.

"We have a strong and varied research program, which touches in some way all of human endeavor," said UGA President Jere W. Morehead in his recent State of the University address. "The life of the mind and the power of inquiry are thriving here."

An overview of UGA's entire research enterprise would fill volumes, but a full appreciation of its depth and character can be found by examining efforts to address two challenges facing our state, nation and world: improving human health and safeguarding the environment. These efforts require collaboration among faculty, research scientists and students from across UGA's 17 colleges and schools. The interdisciplinary centers and institutes within UGA's Office of the Vice President for Research provide enhanced interactions and focus.

Sound minds and bodies

The commitment to improve health for all humanity is a major focus of numerous research laboratories and campus initiatives that track diseases, develop new treatments, and provide outreach programs to help local communities.

The UGA Cancer Center brings together experts from a variety of disciplines to create the next generation of diagnostics and therapeutics, as well as vaccines and other prevention strategies that will help stem the tide of cancer deaths throughout the world. A unique aspect to UGA's war on cancer is its specialized ability to study glycans, tiny sugar molecules on the exterior of all living cells that may be the key to new and improved cancer diagnostics and therapies.

At UGA's Center for Molecular Medicine researchers work to better understand the molecular and cellular basis of human disease, and to use this information for the development of new therapies, cures and diagnostics. Therapeutics developed may be in the form of stem cell-based therapies, vaccines, new drugs, antibodies or protein pharmaceuticals. Research programs also focus on the identification of new biomarkers and other tools that have direct applications to a wide range of diseases including cancer, cardiovascular disease, neurological disorders and diabetes.

Human stem cells have great potential for restoring damaged tissues throughout the body and also accelerating the drug discovery process. At the Regenerative Bioscience Center, scientists are both using stem cells to restore the damaged tissues and, in the Petri dish, to discover new compounds to treat diseases such as Alzheimer's disease.

UGA also launched a major campus-wide initiative in January 2012 to help the state and nation stem its growing epidemic of childhood and adult obesity. With programs rooted in a combination of research and outreach efforts, members of the Obesity Initiative are finding creative and reproducible techniques to help the two-thirds of adults and one-third of children in the U.S. who are overweight or obese live happier, healthier lives. More than 100 UGA faculty are focused on promising areas of obesity research, including epigenetics, immunology, targeted pharmaceuticals, food ingredients, as well as exercise, functional fitness and persuasive communications strategies.

The William A. and Barbara R. Owens Institute for Behavioral Research brings together faculty who specialize in social and behavioral sciences. Together, they research solutions to some of society's most pressing needs, including addiction, family health, racism, education and conservation. Researchers here also combine neuroscience with behavioral studies to better understand affective disorders, compulsive behavior, cognition, sensation and perception.

Scientists working in the Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, the Faculty of Infectious Diseases and the Biomedical and Health Science Institute are developing interventions, including outreach programs, diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines, for some of the world's most insidious and debilitating infectious diseases. They address threats from the emergence and re-emergence of infectious disease-almost 70 percent originate in animals-and strive to improve global health through the integration of the sciences of human medicine, animal medicine, public health and ecological and environmental sciences. Researchers in these centers translate research results into medical and public health interventions designed to halt the advance of diseases in the U.S. and throughout the world.

Members of the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center are developing new materials and devices at nanometer scales to address emerging research and developing needs in national security, sensing and diagnostics, biomedical imaging, drug and vaccine development, cancer treatment, environmental and renewable energy applications.

Making a better planet

Researchers at UGA are also concerned about the health of the environment. The University is home to a number of critically important programs, including the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, the Odum School of Ecology and the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, each designed to help people understand Earth's complex ecosystems, climate and the steps that must be taken to ensure a sustainable future.

Members of UGA's Bioenergy Systems Research Institute are discovering new methods to produce energy from renewable plant resources that leave a much smaller carbon footprint than traditional fossil fuels. By studying every facet of the biomass lifecycle-from optimally selecting or designing and growing plants that can be more efficiently converted to energy, to enhancing methods for harvesting, transporting, processing, treating, and finally converting biomass to fuels, power and material-they are advancing economically viable energy alternatives that enhance the nation's energy security.

The Georgia Initiative for Climate and Society is dedicated to improving the understanding of the complex processes and effects of climate change, and developing new strategies to mitigate the impacts of a warming planet. Faculty working in this field look for the relationships among climate, ecosystems, managed systems, natural resources and society.

UGA's marine scientists are seeking to answer fundamental questions about coastal areas, which provide habitats for fish and birds, protect against storm surges, filter impurities from the water, and are home to an increasing human population. Since 1953, marine scientists and ecologists at the UGA Marine Institute at Sapelo Island have conducted ecological research on Georgia's salt-marsh dominated coastline. Just two years earlier in 1951, the Atomic Energy Commission (now the Department of Energy) founded the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory near Aiken, S.C., with UGA researchers spearheading a new era of ecological research. Since that time, the laboratory has played a crucial role in advancing the fundamental science of ecology and supporting evidence-based environmental stewardship. Last year, the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography merged with UGA, expanding the university's research presence on coastal Georgia and creating new educational opportunities.

Addressing environmental challenges includes developing new approaches to sustainable land use and ensuring agricultural production. At UGA's Plant Center, researchers using cutting edge techniques from plant molecular biology, genetics and genomics are discovering solutions to safeguarding the environment while sustainably meeting the food, feed, fiber and fuel needs of an ever-increasing population.